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ASUS ExpertBook P5 G1: The Real Upgrade Is Business Practicality, Not the AI Label
April 03, 2026
ASUS announced the ExpertBook P5 G1 on March 31, 2026, with 14-inch and 16-inch versions, up to Intel Core Ultra 7, up to 96GB DDR5, and up to 6TB dual-SSD storage. The key story is not the AI branding alone. The bigger change is a portable business design that keeps full office-friendly connectivity and high upgrade headroom.
What Changed
ASUS introduced ExpertBook P5 G1 as a new business laptop generation with two sizes (14-inch and 16-inch), Intel Core Ultra 200H options, and enterprise-focused security.
The hardware ceiling is high for this class: up to 96GB memory and up to 6TB dual-SSD storage. ASUS also lists business-focused ports including Thunderbolt 4, USB-C, USB-A, HDMI 2.1, and RJ45 LAN.
A concrete comparison: compared with the ExpertBook B3 G1 announced days earlier, P5 G1 starts lighter (1.29 kg vs 1.44 kg) while keeping the same top-end memory and storage claims in official specs.
Why It Matters
For IT buyers, this launch matters because it targets a common pain point in corporate fleets: balancing mobility with serviceable specs and wired office compatibility.
Who should care: companies replacing older office laptops, hybrid teams that still depend on HDMI and LAN, and users running heavier multitasking workloads that benefit from high RAM and dual-drive flexibility.
The limiting point is clear: ASUS has not provided clear global pricing in the launch materials, and several highlighted features are optional by configuration (such as battery size, camera tier, Wi-Fi 7, and OLED panel). Real value will depend on actual regional SKUs and street prices.
Practical Takeaway
If you are sourcing business laptops this quarter, keep the P5 G1 on the shortlist only after local configuration sheets and pricing are confirmed.
Priority checks before purchase: the exact battery option, whether Wi-Fi 7 is included, the camera module, and whether the RAM and SSD targets are available in shipping builds rather than upgrade-only limits.
Editorial process: Prepared from official source materials and cross-checked with independent market reporting, then edited under Notebook Center publishing standards.